During Computex 2005, word quickly spread about a giant figure-eight shaped meter
tall copper heatsink at the Zalman Tech co. booth on the Taipei trade show
floor. That heatsink was an attention grabber for certain, and now that the Zalman CNPS9500 LED heatsink is in full production we're
pleased to present this review of it to you.

Not
only will
Frostytech be testing out one of Zalman's latest all-copper low noise heatsinks,
but we'll be testing it with the new Mk.II Synthetic Thermal Test Platform. In addition to thermal stress tests, we've taken sound measurements,
poked and prodded, measured and compared just about every surface of the
Zalman CNPS9500 LED heatsink to about 30 other K8 heatsinks.

The
Zalman CNPS9500 LED heatsink is compatible with all
current AMD and Intel socket formfactors (including Sockets 775, 478, 939, 940,
754), and weighs in at roughly 530grams. The heatsink is voluminous, but designed
to operate quietly and cool under low noise, low fan-speed conditions. At full
speed, its translucent 92mm diameter fan spins at conservative 2600RPM,
but turn down the dial on the FanMate 2 and that speed drops to 1350RPM.
Three heatpipes bent into a figure-eight form the backbone of
the CNPS9500 LED heatsink, and the rest of the design is simply form following
function to a "T."

The
complex shape of the Zalman CNPS9500 LED makes the proposition of
installing it onto a CPU about as endearing as mid-terms... but the process is remarkably easy. The heatsink
comes with a set of clips and retention frames for socket 775, socket 478, and socket
939/745/940 motherboards.

The
clip mechanism for the socket 775 Pentium
4 is the most complicated as it demands the
entire motherboard be removed first for the installation of a special back plate. The rest are pretty
easy, and either utilize the exiting socket retention frames or require nothing more than a
screwdriver.

For the purposes
of Frostytech's tests, we went about configuring the Zalman CNPS9500 LED
for an Athlon64 system (socket 939/754/940). To do this, a special steel clip is
either threaded perpendicularly in between a couple of the copper
heatpipes, or parallel (pictured above) to
them.

The method users will use depends on how
the CPU socket is oriented on the motherboard as Zalman recommend that the exhaust from the
Zalman CNPS9500 LED always be blowing towards the rear of the
chassis.

We should also mention the
following restrictions that may prevent the Zalman CNPS9500 LED from installing
correctly; 1.) no interfering components within 56mm of the center of the CPU
(to the front or back), and none within 45mm from the center of the CPU to the
top or bottom. 2.) there must be at least 135mm space above the CPU socket
in the chassis for the CNPS9500 LED to fit.

FrostyTech's new Test Methodology is outlined in detail
here
if you care to
know what equipment is used, and the parameters under which the tests are conducted. Now let's move forward and take a closer look at
this heatsink, its acoustic characteristics, and of course it performance in the thermal tests!